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Learn about The Online Mom Network
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Join The Online Mom Network
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How Do I Become An Online Mom?
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The Online Mom provides internet technology advice and information to help parents protect their kids, encourage responsible behavior and safely harness the power of technology in the new digital world. Social networking, photo sharing, video games, IM & texting, internet security, cyberbullying, educational resources, the latest on tech hardware, gadgets and software for kids 3-8, tweens and teens, and more.
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Social Networking

Social networking sites like MySpace and
Facebook have become all the rage:
by one
estimate, some 75% of American teenagers have joined at least one. How can you
make
sure your kids are using these sites safely, and under your supervision? Start
with these
tips:
- Make sure your kids know what they can and can't post online. For instance
(as we've
said elsewhere), kids should never post their full names, street or email addresses,
phone
numbers, Social Security numbers, or anything about their parents' personal
financial
status. For their safety, they shouldn't talk about sex or other provocative
issues, either.
-
Make sure your kids use screen names that can't be personally identified
and aren't
sexually provocative.
-
Use the strongest privacy settings your site provides: restrict who can view your
child's
pages to people he or she knows in "real life."
-
Younger children should reject all requests by strangers to become a "friend." (You can
set MySpace to automatically refuse "add" requests from people who
can't spell your
child's last name.)
-
Know your child's online friends. Don't recognize a name? Ask your
child who that
person is, and how they became acquainted.
-
Remind your child that other people - such as employers and college admission
people - may read their pages and look at the pictures they've posted. Once it's
been posted in
public, it's out of their control - forever. Even if they
delete their pages, copies might still
be accessible through search engines, and other people might have saved copies
on their
own computers.
-
Use Google and other search engines to find information your child may have posted 'online' as well as information and comments others may have posted on your
child.
Also consider joining your child's social networking site so you can easily
visit his or her
site and track any changes made to it. (If you do, let your child know you'll
be visiting on
occasion.)
-
Understand your site's privacy policies, and check out the safety tools
they make
available to parents, if any.
-
Many sites prohibit children under 13. Don't give your children permission
to use these
sites: those restrictions are there for a reason. (By the way, the Children's
Online Privacy
Protection Act, which requires sites to get your permission before they collect,
use, or
share any information about your child. If a site lets your child register without
notifying
you, they're violating a federal law.)
-
Don't just worry about child predators. Warn your kids about garden-variety
scammers,
too: people out to steal their money, and yours.

How many users does MySpace have worldwide?
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